No justice, no peace without local organisations: lessons from the first African Truth and Reconciliation Commission Conference

30 November 2016: Truth and Reconciliation Commissions have an increasingly important role in securing peace across many African countries. Jean de Dieu Basabose draws out insights from a gathering of practitioners, academics and policymakers and asks: what part can local organisations play in transitional justice?

A Rwandan peacebuilding organisation has taken a leading role in the organisation of the first African Truth and Reconciliation Commission Conference. Together with the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation and under generous financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung, Shalom Educating for Peace Rwanda brought commissioners, practitioners, academics and policymakers to Kigali, Rwanda for three days of discussions and debate.

The gathering was convened to tackle some of the common challenges facing African Truth and Reconciliation Commissions (TRCs) as well as to learn lessons from past success. For the first time, those involved in African TRCs were able to debate core issues, from lack of support from governments to unrealistic timeframes given to Commissions to victim-focused vs perpetrator-focused approaches.

The timing of the conference is critical. TRCs are playing an increasingly central role in peacebuilding in local communities and on national levels in many African countries. But their impact has not yet been comprehensively assessed, nor lessons learned from the challenges and successes shared by African TRCs.

A map for collaboration

One of the most consistent issues identified by participants was the lack of involvement of citizens and civil society in TRCs

One of the most consistent issues identified by participants was the lack of involvement of citizens and civil society in TRCs. Locals are often excluded from TRC processes. Reports are not made publicly available, or are inaccessible to the general public. The path of collaboration between local NGOs and TRCs is inconsistent and unclear. This all contributes to shutting out the direct beneficiaries of TRCs, those citizens who should be encouraged to own Truth and Reconciliation processes.

The theme gave Shalom Educating for Peace Rwanda an opportunity to share its own experience of working with TRCs as a local NGO. Shalom was able to promote the importance of grassroots organisations in the implementation of TRCs, noting especially the benefit of involving groups that are politically neutral and that have direct access to local communities.

Pushing further with the idea of integrating Commissions and grassroots organisations, Shalom proposed to participants the creation of a platform where TRCs and local organisations can meet, share ideas and develop approaches for sustainable reconciliation.

The Pan-African Reconciliation Network

The PAREN initiative is specifically expected to mobilize and strengthen the technical ability of societal groups

Conversation around the theme of collaboration resulted in the innovation of a partnership strategy: the Pan-African Reconciliation Network (PAREN). This initiative, to be organised by the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, has the objective of creating and maintaining an international platform for practitioners, policy makers, analysts and researchers to exchange views, analysis, advice and publications relating to the challenge of promotion of reconciliation on the continent.

The initiative is specifically expected to mobilize and strengthen the technical ability of societal groups. It will develop a database and enable the identification of practitioners who can travel to assist societies and countries undergoing reconciliation processes. Alongside this, a PAREN website, social media presence, print and broadcast media will facilitate the exchange of articles and research.

Meeting the needs of local groups

At the closing session of the conference, participants were reminded that the contemporary African context invites us to invest enormously in reconciliation. Many African countries are perceived as divided societies, with a context that undermines efforts for socio-economic development. This context points to the necessity of establishing effective structures for sustainable reconciliation.

A successful and sustainable reconciliation process requires freedom, empathy, equality and inclusiveness. It is essential that the needs of everyone are met, including those at the local level, in order to achieve the ultimate end of restoring relationships and interconnectedness.

You can help broadcast the work, experiences and opinions of local peacebuilders through the social media tabs on your left. As a forum for peacebuilders we actively encourage debate, and so if the above piece provoked any thoughts or opinions please share them in the comment box below.

To include this attribution, add the following html code to the bottom of the article:

<div><div class="style:both"></div><a href="http://www.insightonconflict.org"><img style="float: left; margin-right: 10px;" alt="Insight on Conflict is the leading online resource for local peacebuilding and human rights in conflict areas. " src="http://www.insightonconflict.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ioc-license.jpg" width="200" height="95" /></a>This article was <a href="" >originally published on Insight on Conflict</a>. Published by <a href="http://www.peacedirect.org/">Peace Direct</a>, Insight on Conflict is the leading online resource for local peacebuilding and human rights in conflict areas.<div class="style:both"></div></div>

Comments

No comments yet

Name:

Email address:

URL:

Comment:

If you enter anything in this field your comment will be treated as spam:

More from the blog

A new report by the Mandera Peacebuilding Programme and Interpeace presents the first-hand opinions of grassroots communities across Mandera County, Kenya, exploring the impediments to peace. Read more »

Colombia is six months in to a peace deal intended to end 50 years of conflict. With presidential elections due next year, the prospect of lasting peace is even more complicated than before. Lina Maria Jaramillo reports on some of the issues that have emerged since the peace deal. Read more »

The people that disappeared during Lebanon’s civil war have haunted the country for years. But what have the authorities done to help? Read more »

About the author

Jean de Dieu Basabose is Insight on Conflict's Local Correspondent in Rwanda. He has more than 10 years' experience in peacebuilding and has facilitated numerous training sessions and workshops on mediation, networking, community organising, organisational governance, peace monitoring and communication. Through Shalom Educating for Peace, a peace education organisation he co-founded in 2007 and co-directs, Basabose is making efforts to build and sustain peace through education. Jean holds a Master’s degree in Conflict Resolution and Peace Studies.